Wyoming Counties Pennsylvania

Wyoming Counties Pennsylvania

Geology of the Ransom Quadrangle Lackawanna, Luzerne, and Wyoming Counties Pennsylvania By THOMAS M. KEHN, ERNEST E. GLICK, and WILLIAM C. CULBERTSON GEOLOGICAL SURVEY BULLETIN 1213 Description of the outcropping and subsurface strata of Devonian, Mississippian, and Pennsylvanian age and of the unconsolidated sediments of Quaternary age UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1966 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STEWART L. UDALL, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY William T. Pecora, Director Library of Congress catalog-card No. GS 66-215 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 CONTENTS Page Abstract---------------------------------------------------------- 1 Introduction______________________________________________________ 2 Location and extent of area_____________________________________ 2 Purpose and scope of report_____________________________________ 3 Fieldwork and examination of well cuttings_______________________ 4 Acknowledgments _____________________________ - _____ --- ---- --_ 5 Previouswork_________________________________________________ 5 Topography and drainage ____________________ ------_------_________ 5 StratigraphY------------------------------------------------------ 7 DevonianSystem---------------------------------------------- 8 Lower Devonian Series_____________________________________ 8 IIelderberg GrouP------------------------------------- 8 Kalkberg Limestone ____________ --------______ ----_ 8 New Scotland Limestone equivalent_________________ 9 Becraft Limestone_________________________________ 9 Port Ewen Limestone equivalent____________________ 10 Oriskany Group ____________ ------_______________ --____ 11 Shriver Chert_____________________________________ 11 Esopus Shale__________________________________________ 13 Middle Devonian Series ______________________________ -_-_-_ 13 Onondaga Limestone _____________ ------________________ 13 IIamilton Group ___________________ -------_____ -------_ 15 Marcell us Shale_ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ 15 Mahantango Formation____________________________ 16 Upper Devonian Series_____________________________________ 17 Susquehanna Group___________________________________ 17 Trimmers Rock Formation_________________________ 18 Catskill Formation________________________________ 19 Mississippian System_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ 26 Pocono Formation_________________________________________ 26 Pennsylvanian System_________________________________________ 30 Pottsville Formation_______________________________________ 30 Post-Pottsville rocks_______________________________________ 32 Quaternary System____________________________________________ 34 Pleistocene and Recent Series_______________________________ 34 Glacial terrace deposits_________________________________ 34 Alluvium_____________________________________________ 35 Structure_________________________________________________________ 36 Rockfall at Bald Mountain_________________________________________ 36 Geologic history___________________________________________________ 39 Economic geology_________________________________________________ 41 Coal_________________________________________________________ 41 Gas__________________________________________________________ 41 Sandandgravel_______________________________________________ 42 III IV CONTENTS Page Stratigraphic sections______________________________________________ 42 Powerline A_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ __ _ 44 Powerline B _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 48 Powerline C _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 49 Buttermilk Creek______________________________________________ 56 Ransom A____________________________________________________ 58 Ransom B____________________________________________________ 60 Falls_________________________________________________________ 62 Log of Richards 1 welL____________________________________________ 64 References cited___________________________________________________ 78 ILLUSTRATIONS [Plates are in pocket] PLATE 1. Geologic map and section of the Ransom quadrangle. 2. Stratigraphic section and radiometric logs of the Richards well, Ransom quadrangle. 3. Composite stratigraphic section of the exposed Devonian, Mississippian, and Pennsylvanian strata in the Ransom quadrangle. Page FIGURE 1. Map showing the Ransom quadrangle relative to the anthra­ cite fields and to the physiographic subdivisions of east- central Pennsylvania___________________________________ 3 2. Chart showing classification of Devonian, Mississippian, and Pennsylvanian rocks in the Ransom quadrangle___________ 6 3. Photographs showing typical crossbedding in the Catskill Formation____________________________________________ 24 4. Diagram showing probable relation of the conglomerate ex- posed on· Bald Mountain to other strata__________________ 25 5. Photograph showing ripple marks in basal part of Griswold Gap Member of Pocono Formation near the Falling Springs Reservoir darn________________________________________ 28 6. Chart showing correlation of Pennsylvanian rocks of the bitu- minous and anthra~ite fields of Pennsylvania______________ 31 7. Diagrammatic section of the rockfall at Bald Mountain______ 38 8. Map showing location and designation of sections measured in the Ransom and Pittston quadrangles____________________ 43 GEOLOGY OF THE RANSOM QUADRANGLE, LACKAWANNA, LUZERNE, AND WYOMING COUNTIES, PENNSYLVANIA By THOMAS M. l{EHN, ERNEST E. GLICK, and WILLIAM C. CuLBERTSON ABSTRACT The Ransom 7%-minute quadrangle is ahout 56 square miles in area. Most of the quadrangle is in the Allegheny Plateau; the southeasternmost part is underlain by the Northern Anthracite field of the Valley and Ridge province. The outcropping bedrock in most of the quadrangle is the Catskill Formation ot Late Devonian age. The Pocono Formation of Early Mississippian age and the Pottsville Formation and post-Pottsville rocks of Pennsylvanian age crop out in the southeastern part of the quadrangle. Eleven formations of Devonian age in the subsurface are provisionally recognized from the study of cuttings of the Richards 1 well. They range downward from the Catskill Formation of the Susquehanna Group to the Kalkberg Limestone of the Helderberg Group. The sedimentary strata studied in the Ransom quadrangle have a total stratigraphic thickness of about 12,000 feet and constitute one of the most complete sections of undeformed Devonian, Mississippian, and Pennsylvanian rock in northeastern Pennsylvania. The Lower Devonian consists of marine limestones and shales that have been assigned-from the base upward-to the Kalwberg Limestone, New Scotland Limestone equivalent, Becraft Limestone, and Port Ewen Limestone equivalent of the Helderberg Group; the Shriver Chert of the Oriskany Group; and the Esopus Shale. In this study the Ridgeley Sandstone of the Oriskany Group was not recognized in the well cuttings, but the uppermost beds of limestone included in the Shriver Chert may be its stratigraphic equivalent. The Middle Devonian strata consist of marine limestone, shale, and siltstone. Most limestone in the sequence is in the Onondaga Limestone, which also con­ tains chert and bentonite. The shale and siltstone strata have been assigned to the Marcellus Shale and Mahantango Formation. Rocks of early Late Devo­ nian age are assigned to the Trimmers Rock Formation. The lower part of the formation is a shale and siltstone sequence that was probably deposited in a marine environment. The upper part, which is a sequence of siltstone and sand­ stone that contains a few pyritized plant fossils, probably represents deltaic deposition. The sandstone is the oldest rock of Devonian age in which quartz granules were noted. The rocks of Late Devonian age (consisting of beds of shale, sandstone, and conglomerate of the Catskill Formation) are informally subdivided into five zones on the basis of the size of the constituent quartz sand and quartz pebbles. The two lower zones are marine and are more shaly than the three upper zones. The three upper zones are nonmarine and contain grayish-brown "red" beds. A local conglomerate that caps Bald Mountain interfingers along strike with beds of shale and conglomeratic sandstone in the upper zone of the Catskill Formation. 1 2 GEOLOGY, RANSOM QUADRANGLE, PENNSYLVANIA At the top of the upper zone, a claystone sequence about 138 feet thick contains scattered grains and pebbles of quartz and pebbles and boulders of sandstone. Rocks of Early Mississippian age (which constitute the Pocono Formation) locally fill shallow channels in the underlying Catskill Formation, but at most places the contact of the formations appears to be conformable. Coarse sand­ stone and co~1glomerate are the predominant: roeks of the Griswold Gap Member of the Pocono. The upper part of the Pocono eonBists of interbedded shale, siltstone, sandstone, and conglomerate. The grayish-brown "red" beds near the top of the formation at localities adjacent to the Ransom quadrangle may be a transition zone between the Pocono and the Mauch Chunk F'ormation of Late Mississippian and Early Pennsylvanian age. Strata of Pennsylvanian age unconformably overlie the Pocono Formation in the Ransom quadrangle. These strata consist of coarse sandstone and

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